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Transcript Services Marketing
Services Marketing
Chapter 9:
Balancing Demand
and Productive
Capacity
Slide © 2010 by Lovelock & Wirtz
Services Marketing 7/e
Chapter 9 – Page 1
Overview of Chapter 9
Services Marketing
Fluctuations in Demand Threaten Service Productivity
Managing Capacity
Analyze Patterns of Demand
Managing Demand
Inventory Demand Through Waiting Lines and Queuing Systems
Customer Perceptions of Waiting Time
Inventory Demand Through Reservation Systems
Slide © 2010 by Lovelock & Wirtz
Services Marketing 7/e
Chapter 9 – Page 2
Services Marketing
Fluctuations in Demand
Threaten Service Productivity
Slide © 2010 by Lovelock & Wirtz
Services Marketing 7/e
Chapter 9 – Page 3
Defining Productive Capacity?
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Productive capacity can take several forms in services
Physical facilities designed to contain customers
Physical facilities designed for storing or processing goods
Physical equipment used to process people, possessions, or
information
Labor
Infrastructure
Financial success in capacity-constrained business is a
function of management’s ability to use productive capacity
as efficiently and profitably as possible.
Slide © 2010 by Lovelock & Wirtz
Services Marketing 7/e
Chapter 9 – Page 4
From Excess Demand to
Excess Capacity
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Excess
demand
Too much demand relative to maximum
capacity
Demand
exceeds
optimum
capacity
Service quality is perceived to have
deteriorated
Optimum
capacity
Staff is not overworked and customers
receive good service
Excess
capacity
Too much capacity relative to demand
Slide © 2010 by Lovelock & Wirtz
Services Marketing 7/e
Chapter 9 – Page 5
Variations in Demand Relative to
Capacity
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VOLUME DEMANDED
Demand > Capacity
(business is lost)
CAPACITY UTILIZED
Maximum Available
Capacity
Demand >
optimum capacity
(quality declines)
Optimum Capacity
(Demand ≈ Supply)
Excess capacity
Low Utilization
(may send bad signals)
(wasted resources)
TIME CYCLE 1
Slide © 2010 by Lovelock & Wirtz
Services Marketing 7/e
TIME CYCLE 2
Chapter 9 – Page 6
Addressing Problem of
Fluctuating Demand
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Two basic approaches of which most firms use a mix of:
Adjust level of capacity to meet demand
Need to understand productive capacity and how it varies on an
incremental basis
Manage level of demand
Use marketing strategies to smooth out peaks, fill in valleys
Inventorying demand until capacity becomes available
Slide © 2010 by Lovelock & Wirtz
Services Marketing 7/e
Chapter 9 – Page 7
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Managing Capacity
Slide © 2010 by Lovelock & Wirtz
Services Marketing 7/e
Chapter 9 – Page 8
Managing Capacity
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Enables more people to be served at same level of capacity
Stretch and shrink:
Offer inferior extra capacity at peaks (e.g., bus/train standees)
Use facilities for longer/shorter periods
Reduce amount of time spent in process by minimizing slack time
Adjusting capacity to match demand
Rest during low demand
Ask customers to share
Cross-train employees
Create flexible capacity
Use part-time employees
Customers perform self-service
Rent/share facilities and
equipment
Slide © 2010 by Lovelock & Wirtz
Services Marketing 7/e
Chapter 9 – Page 9
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Analyze Patterns of Demand
Slide © 2010 by Lovelock & Wirtz
Services Marketing 7/e
Chapter 9 – Page 10
Demand Varies by Market Segment
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Understand why customers from specific market segments
select this service
Keep good records of transactions to analyze demand
patterns
Sophisticated software can help to track customer consumption
patterns
Record weather conditions and other special factors that
might influence demand
Slide © 2010 by Lovelock & Wirtz
Services Marketing 7/e
Chapter 9 – Page 11
Predictable Demand Patterns and
Their Underlying Causes
Predictable Cycles
of Demand Levels
day
week
month
year
other
Slide © 2010 by Lovelock & Wirtz
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Underlying Causes of
Cyclical Variations
employment
billing or tax
payments/refunds
pay days
school hours/holidays
seasonal climate changes
public/religious holidays
natural cycles
(e.g., coastal tides)
Services Marketing 7/e
Chapter 9 – Page 12
Causes of Seemingly
Random Changes in Demand Levels
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Question: Which of these events can be predicted?
1. Weather
2. Health problems
3. Accidents, Fires, Crime
4. Natural disasters
Slide © 2010 by Lovelock & Wirtz
Services Marketing 7/e
Chapter 9 – Page 13
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Managing Demand
Slide © 2010 by Lovelock & Wirtz
Services Marketing 7/e
Chapter 9 – Page 14
Managing Demand
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Take no action
Let demand find its own levels
Interventionist approach
Reduce demand in peak periods
Increase demand when there is excess capacity
Inventorying demand until capacity becomes available
Formal wait and queuing system
Reservation system
Slide © 2010 by Lovelock & Wirtz
Services Marketing 7/e
Chapter 9 – Page 15
Marketing Mix Elements to Shape
Demand Patterns
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Use price and other nonmonetary costs to manage demand
Change product elements
Modify place and time of delivery
No change
Vary times when service is available
Offer service to customers at a new location
Promotion and Education
Slide © 2010 by Lovelock & Wirtz
Services Marketing 7/e
Chapter 9 – Page 16
Hotel Room Demand Curves by
Segment and Season
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Price per
room night
Bl
Bh
Th
Bh = business travelers in high season
Bl = business travelers in low season
Th = tourist in high season
Tl = tourist in low season
Tl
Bl
Bh
Th
Tl
Quantity of rooms demanded at each price
by travelers in each segment in each season
Slide © 2010 by Lovelock & Wirtz
Services Marketing 7/e
Note: hypothetical example
Chapter 9 – Page 17
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Inventory Demand Through
Waiting Lines and Queuing
Systems
Slide © 2010 by Lovelock & Wirtz
Services Marketing 7/e
Chapter 9 – Page 18
Waiting Is a Universal
Phenomenon!
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An average person may spend up to 30 minutes/day waiting
in line—equivalent to over one week per year!
Nobody likes to wait
It's boring, time-wasting, and sometimes physically
uncomfortable
Slide © 2010 by Lovelock & Wirtz
Services Marketing 7/e
Chapter 9 – Page 19
Why Do Waiting Lines Occur?
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Because number of arrivals at a facility exceeds capacity of
system to process them at a specific point in the process
Queues are basically a symptom of unresolved capacity
management problems
Not all queues take form of a physical waiting line in a
single location
Queues may be physical but geographically dispersed
Some are virtual (e.g., phone)
Slide © 2010 by Lovelock & Wirtz
Services Marketing 7/e
Chapter 9 – Page 20
Managing Waiting Lines
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Rethink design of queuing system
Install a reservations system
Tailoring the queuing system to
different market segments
Manage customer behavior and
perceptions of wait
Redesign processes to shorten
transaction time
Slide © 2010 by Lovelock & Wirtz
Services Marketing 7/e
Chapter 9 – Page 21
Queuing Systems can be Tailored to
Market Segments
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Urgency of job
Emergencies vs. non-emergencies
Duration of service transaction
Number of items to transact
Complexity of task
Payment of premium price
Importance of customer
Frequent users/high volume purchasers vs. others
Slide © 2010 by Lovelock & Wirtz
Services Marketing 7/e
Chapter 9 – Page 22
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Customer Perceptions of
Waiting Time
Slide © 2010 by Lovelock & Wirtz
Services Marketing 7/e
Chapter 9 – Page 23
Ten Propositions on Psychology of
Waiting Lines
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Feels longer than
Unoccupied time
Occupied time
Solo waits
Group waits
Physically uncomfortable waits
Comfortable waits
Pre- and post-process waits
In-process waits
Unexplained waits
Explained waits
Unfamiliar waits
Known, finite waits
Unfair waits
Fair waits
Anxious waits
Calm waits
Monotonous waits
Valued waits
Sources: Maister; Davis & Heineke; Jones & Peppiatt
Slide © 2010 by Lovelock & Wirtz
Services Marketing 7/e
Chapter 9 – Page 24
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Inventory Demand Through
Reservations System
Slide © 2010 by Lovelock & Wirtz
Services Marketing 7/e
Chapter 9 – Page 25
Benefits of Reservations
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Saves customers from having to wait in line
Helps to control and manage the demand (e.g., leave time
for emergency jobs)
Pre-sells the service and can be used to prepare and
educate the customer for the service encounter
Data captured helps organizations to understand their
demand patterns and to plan their operations and staffing
levels
Slide © 2010 by Lovelock & Wirtz
Services Marketing 7/e
Chapter 9 – Page 26
Characteristics of Well-Designed
Reservations System
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Fast and user-friendly for customers and staff
Responsive to customer queries and needs
Offers options for self service (e.g., through an online
reservations system)
Accommodates preferences (e.g., room with a view)
Deflects demand from unavailable first choices to
alternative times and locations
Slide © 2010 by Lovelock & Wirtz
Services Marketing 7/e
Chapter 9 – Page 27
Reservations Strategies Should
Focus on Yield
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Yield analysis helps managers recognize opportunity cost of
allocating capacity to one customer/segment when another
segment might yield a higher rate later
Decisions need to be based on good information
Detailed records of past usage
Current market intelligence and good marketing sense
Realistic estimate of the chances of obtaining higher rated business
When firms overbook to increase yield,
Victims of overbooking should be compensated to preserve the
relationship
Slide © 2010 by Lovelock & Wirtz
Services Marketing 7/e
Chapter 9 – Page 28
Setting Hotel Room Sales Targets
by Segment and Time Period
Capacity
(% rooms)
100%
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Week 7
Week 36
(Low Season)
(High Season)
Out of commission for renovation
Loyalty Program Members
Loyalty Program
Members
Transient guests
Weekend
package
50%
W/E
package
Transient guests
Groups and conventions
Groups (no conventions)
Airline contracts
Time
Nights: M
Slide © 2010 by Lovelock & Wirtz
Tu
W
Airline contracts
Th
F
S
Su
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M
Tu
W
Th
F
S
Su
Chapter 9 – Page 29
Creating Alternative Use For
Otherwise Wasted Capacity
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Use capacity for service
differentiation
Reward your best
customers and build loyalty
Customer and channel
development
Reward employees
Barter free capacity
Slide © 2010 by Lovelock & Wirtz
Services Marketing 7/e
Chapter 9 – Page 30
Information Needed for Demand and
Capacity Management Strategies
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Historical data on
demand level and
composition,
marketing variables
Demand forecasts by
segment under
specified conditions
Segment-bysegment data
Fixed and variable
cost data, profitability
of incremental sales
Meaningful locationby-location demand
variations
Customer attitudes
towards queuing
Customer opinions
of quality at
different levels of
capacity utilization
Slide © 2010 by Lovelock & Wirtz
Services Marketing 7/e
Chapter 9 – Page 31
Summary
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At any moment in time, a fixed-capacity service may face
Excess demand
Demand exceeding optimum capacity
Demand and supply well-balanced at the level of optimum capacity
Excess capacity
To balance demand and capacity, a firm can:
Manage capacity
Take no action and let demand find its own levels
Reduce demand in peak periods
Increase demand when there is excess capacity
Inventory demand using wait & queuing, and reservation systems
Capacity can be managed through:
Stretching or shrinking capacity levels
Adjusting capacity to match demand
Creating flexible capacity
Slide © 2010 by Lovelock & Wirtz
Services Marketing 7/e
Chapter 9 – Page 32
Summary
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Demand can be managed through
Analysis of patterns
To be reshaped by marketing strategies
Waiting is a universal phenomenon. Waits can be reduced by
Rethinking and redesigning the queuing system
Managing customers’ behavior and their perceptions of the wait
Installing an effective reservation system focused on yield
Slide © 2010 by Lovelock & Wirtz
Services Marketing 7/e
Chapter 9 – Page 33